A/HRC/30/67

United Nations / A/HRC/30/67
/ General Assembly / Distr.: General
9 December 2015
Original: English

Human Rights Council

Thirtieth session

Agenda item 2

Annual report of the United Nations High Commissioner

for Human Rights and reports of the Office of the High Commissioner

and the Secretary-General

Violations and abuses committed by Boko Haram and the impact on human rights in the countries affected[*]

Report of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights

Summary
The present report is submitted to the Human Rights Council pursuant to Council resolution S-23/1, in which the Council requested the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights to collect information from affected States and, in close cooperation and consultation with them, to prepare a report on violations and abuses of human rights and atrocities committed by Boko Haram in the States affected by such acts, with a view towards accountability. On 1 July 2015, the High Commissioner provided the Council with an oral update on the subject.

Contents

Page

I.Introduction...... 3

II.Methodology...... 3

III.Context...... 4

IV.Displacement of persons...... 4

A.Internally displaced persons ...... 4

B.Refugees ...... 5

V.Applicable legal framework...... 5

VI.Human rights abuses by Boko Haram...... 6

A.Killing of civilians...... 6

B.Abductions ...... 7

C.Torture and other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment...... 8

D.Sexual and gender-based violence...... 8

E.Violence against children and use of children in hostilities...... 9

F.Attacks against civilian and protected objects...... 10

G.Destruction andappropriation of property...... 10

VII.Human rights violations in the context of counter-insurgency operations...... 11

A.Lack of protection of civilians and killing of civilians during counter-insurgency operations12

B.Enforced disappearances, arrests, detention and ill-treatment...... 12

C.Use of civilian vigilantes...... 13

D.Economic and social rights, and freedom of religion and belief...... 14

E.Measures taken by Governments ...... 14

VIII.Conclusions and recommendations...... 16

I.Introduction

1.Since 2009, Boko Haram has been committing widespread human rights abuses in large parts of north-eastern Nigeria. In December 2013, the group extended its attacks to other States bordering Nigeria, namely, Cameroon, thenthe Niger (in February 2015) and Chad (in June 2015). The expansion triggered bilateral and multilateral counter-insurgency measures by the States affected. In January 2015, the conclusion of a cooperation agreement between Cameroon and Chad and between Nigeria and Chad led to robust joint military operations against Boko Haram, removing it from much of the territory it had controlled. In March 2015, regional coordination by the African Union led to the creation of theMultinational Joint Task Force to fight Boko Haram, involving troops from Benin, Cameroon, Chad, the Niger and Nigeria.

2.Despite the above-mentioned efforts, Boko Haram continues to commit gross human rights abuses and serious violations of international humanitarian lawresulting in ongoing casualties and furtherdestruction of property. The present report focuses, in accordance with Human Rights Council resolution S-23/1, on the abuses and violations of human rights and international humanitarian law committed by Boko Haram, and primarily covers the period when the conflict became regionalized, from December 2013 until July 2015. It also includes information on violations of international human rights law and international humanitarian law allegedly committed by government security forces during counter-insurgency operations.

II.Methodology

3.Since early 2015, the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) has deployed human rights officers to States affected by Boko Haram, for varied periods, to collect information on human rights abuses and violations and violations of international humanitarian law. The present report is based primarily on more than 350 confidential interviews that OHCHR conducted with individuals from diverse ethnic and religious groups, including 210 women and girls, as well as refugees and internally displaced persons. In addition, on 21 and 22 August 2015, the Assistant Secretary-General for Human Rights visited Maiduguri, in the State of Borno, Nigeria, where he met with State officials, victims of attacks by Boko Haram and representatives of civil society.

4.Besides collecting information through confidential interviews, representatives of OHCHR met government authorities with whom cooperation wasgenerally good. OHCHR consulted other United Nations entities and civil society organizations operating in affected areas, coordinators of camps for displaced persons and refugees, religious and traditional leaders, women’s groups, and teachers. OHCHR paid special attention to the gender dimensions of the conflict.

5.The present report focuses on regions where Boko Haram has been active, namely the far north region of Cameroon, the south-west region of Chad, the south-east of the Niger and the north-east region of Nigeria.

6.Several challenges arose during the period under review.Besides the time frame allotted by the Human Rights Council in resolution 23/1, other practical constraints were encountered, including the time taken for budget allocation, delays in staffing and the difficulty in covering such a vast geographical area in the States affected combined to limit the findings made, including in terms of the amount of information gathered and corroborated. Other constraints included lack of access to certain areas owing to ongoing attacks by Boko Haram and the reluctanceof witnesses to share their experiences out of fear of reprisals or stigma, particularly victims of sexual or gender-based violence.

III.Context

7.Northern Nigeria has been subject to civil unrest and resistance since the emergence and conquest of the Sokoto caliphate in the early 1900s. Decades later, in 2002 Boko Haram, founded in Maiduguri by Muhammed Yusuf,began to advocate a strict form of sharia law that also opposed all Western influence and education.Mosques and schools run by Boko Haram enrolled children and subsequently became recruiting grounds.

8.In 2009, following a spate of attacks against government institutions in the States of Bauchi and Borno, security forces killed Muhammed Yusuf. Under the leadership of Abubakar Shekau, Boko Harambegan to launch attacksagainst objects protected under international law, such as places of worship and schools.

IV.Displacement of persons

A.Internally displaced persons

9.As at July 2015, there were 1.3 million internally displaced persons (56 per cent of which are children) in Nigeria (with the State of Borno hosting the largest population): 81,693 displaced persons across four divisions of the far north region in Cameroon; and 18,882 displaced persons in Chad, including returnees from Nigeria, spread across four districts. The internally displaced are held in camps, informal settlements, host communities, with families, in rented houses, in places of worship and public buildings and at border crossings. Consequently, their enjoyment of the rights to education, food, health, shelter, and water and sanitation has been greatly reduced.Numerous displaced children have no access to education, while those who remain in their communities often receive poor quality education owing to insecurity, the lack of teachers (who have fled0 and the destruction of schools.

10.In Cameroon, most border villages in the far north remain deserted.The World Food Programme has warned that famine will be unavoidable in the coming year if internally displaced persons are unable to return to their homes and to cultivate farmlands. OHCHR observed that families hosting displaced persons faced food shortages, and that children were used to find food, something that exposed them to such dangers as sexual abuse.

11.The protection concerns in some camps for displaced persons in Nigeria include insecurity, tensions among residents, and between them and host communities, and sexual and gender-based violence.A government report into allegations of rape and child trafficking in camps for displaced persons found no actual evidence of child trafficking, but rather factors predisposing to it.[1]According to the Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, as many as 3 million people in northern Nigeria alone would not meet their basic food needs without humanitarian aid after July 2015.[2]

12.OHCHR noted that, although a significant number of displaced persons in Nigeria have begun to return spontaneously to their places of residence, attacks by Boko Haram continue; security and protection concerns therefore persist, including those raised by the existence of landmines.

B.Refugees

13.Since the escalation of violence in north-eastern Nigeria in 2013, thousands have fled across the border into Cameroon, Chad and the Niger, while attacks in the Niger have forced people from Diffa to flee across the border into Chad. This has resulted in a major refugee crisis in the region.

14.In the Niger, OHCHR was informed by UNHCR that, as at July 2015,some 16,000 Nigerian refugees were in Diffa, and that 40 per cent of all refugees in Diffa were children.

15.In Chad, as at July 2015, 7,139 refugees from Nigeria and the Niger were spread across 3,132 households in itsDar es Salaam refugee camp, in Chad.

16.Minawao camp, situated in far north region of Cameroon, has witnessed the largest influx of refugees in the Lake Chad basin. Established in July 2013, the camp hosts(as at July 2015) 40,995 refugees, largely from the States of Adamawa and Borno in Nigeria. Some 75 per cent were children aged between 8 and 17 years, and 53 per cent were women and girls.New refugees continue to arrive in the camp (2,345 in June 2015 alone).

17.OHCHR received information that, contrary to the principle of non-refoulement, the Niger military, on at least one occasion, forced Nigerian refugees who had endured lengthy and life-threatening journeys from their villages, as well as Nigerians who had long resided in the Niger, back to Nigeria, accusing them of bringing Boko Haram attacks. Similar incidents of forced return of Nigerian refugees from Cameroon and Chad have been reported. Furthermore, Nigerian refugees have allegedly been targeted by local authorities as being members of Boko Haram in these countries, on the sole basis of their nationality.

V. Applicable legal framework

18.Cameroon, Chad, the Niger and Nigeria have ratified several international and regional human rights instruments. All are party to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination, the Convention against Torture and Other Cruel Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment, the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women and the Convention on the Rights of the Child.In addition, the Niger and Nigeria are party to the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities, the Convention on the Protection of the Rights of All Migrant Workers and Members of Their Families and the Convention for the Protection of All Persons from Enforced Disappearance.

19.The nature and intensity of the armed violence, its protracted nature and the level of organization of Boko Haram as an armed group attest to the existence of a non-international armed conflict in northern Nigeria.[3] The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), in its annual report for 2013,[4] and the International Criminal Court[5] have confirmed the existence of an armed conflict between the Nigerian armed forces and armed groups since May 2013. Boko Haram has conducted operations and several attacks in parts of Cameroon, Chad and the Niger bordering northern Nigeria;however, given the challenges faced in collecting information, OHCHR has not been able to gather sufficient elements allowing it to conclusively determine a non-international armed conflict between Boko Haram and the armed forces of these three countries.[6] OHCHR nevertheless noted that Cameroon, Chad and the Niger are also party to the four Geneva Conventions of 1949 and Additional Protocol II thereto. All parties to the conflict are bound by the relevant rules of treaty and customary law applicable to non-international armed conflicts, in particular article 3 common to the Geneva Conventions of 1949 and Additional Protocol II thereto.

VI. Human rights abuses by Boko Haram[7]

A.Killing of civilians

20.Government sources in the States concerned have estimated that some 20,000 civilians, including an undetermined number of women and children, have been killed by Boko Haram since 2009.[8]The actual number of fatalities,however, is likely to be much higher. Civilians have been shot, beheaded, amputated, stoned, drowned, burned and bombed.

21.Boko Haram has used stones, machetes, knives, sophisticated and high-calibre weapons, improvised explosive devices, landmines, guns mounted on pickup trucks, military helicopters, armoured vehicles and motorcycles to perpetrate killings. Men and boys who refused to adopt the beliefs professed by Boko Haram were specifically targeted in killings, as were law enforcement officials, teachers, health-care workers and members of civilian self-defence groups.

22.In Nigeria, Boko Haram intentionally killed and maimed civilians in attacks throughout the State of Borno and in parts of the States of Adamawa and Yobe. Many witnesses reported that Boko Haram shot civilians that tried to escape during attacks in Askira Uba, Baga, Bama, Damasak, Gombi, Gwoza, Kwajafa, Madagali, Maiduguri, Michika and Mubi. The killings were often preceded by death threats or an invitation from Boko Haram “inviting” men and boys to join them in “the work of Allah”. Those who refused to join were killed, and their bodies often left to rot in the streets, in wells or river beds.

23.OHCHR received,for example, video footage of a massacre of civilians after Boko Haram captured Bama, in October 2014. It depicted several men with their arms bound, driven in a truck to a bridge where they were shot, one after the other, in the back of the head and thrown into a river. It also showed civilians held in a room and shot; Boko Haram fighters then trampled on bodies to check that the victims were dead. Thefootage is consistent with information documented by OHCHR on the attack in Bama. OHCHR also received information that, in Madagali (State of Adamawa) in November 2014, Boko Haram assembled some 1,000 male villagers at the local school and shot them. Witnesses interviewed in theStates of Adamawa, Borno and Yobe recalled numerous cases of men and boys being shot, hanged, hacked to death, stoned and, in some cases, their bodies piled up in the street, and their relatives forced to identify them.

24.In the Niger, OHCHR was informed of reports of killings, in Bosso and Diffa, particularly in February 2015, and on Karamga Island in Lake Chad, in April 2015. A witness told OHCHR how her husband and 14 members of her family had been executed by Boko Haram during the attack on Karamga. Other witnesses to the attack spoke of countless casualties and of dead bodies buried in eight mass graves,each containing around 12 bodies. A detained Boko Haram member, aged 16, told OHCHR that his mission in Karamga was to “slaughter men”. Refugee witnesses from Damasak, Nigeria, recalled that in November 2014, fleeing men and boys were captured by Boko Haram, assembled under a tree and shot for refusing to join the group.

25.In Cameroon, government figures indicate that 360 civilians were killed by Boko Haram between April 2013 and July 2014.According to information gathered by OHCHR in interviews,more than 770 civilians were allegedly massacred by Boko Haram in Logone and Chari, Mayo Sava and Mayo Tsanaga, the three most affected divisions in the far north region of Cameroon–.

26.In Chad, in February 2015, Boko Haram was allegedly responsible for shooting and massacringmore than 24 people on the islands of Lake Chad, including in the localities of Kaiga-Kingiria, Kangalom and Ngouboua.

27.A number of women and girls who were forced to marry Boko Haram fighters were killed when the group was forced to retreat by the joint forces, reportedly so that they would not remarry “infidels” or provide information to regional forces.

28.The increasingrecourse of Boko Haram to suicide bomb attacks on soft targets, such as markets, has led to more deaths in the first half of 2015 than in the latter half of 2014. Between May and July 2015, these attacks resulted in more than 800 deaths in Nigeria alone. On 11 July, in N’Djamena, Chad, a man disguised as a woman detonated a bomb in a market place, killing 15 civilians. In July 2015, in Maroua, Cameroon, in two separate incidents, girls were used for the first time to detonate bombs, one in a market and another in a residential area, killing some 20 people.

B. Abductions

29.Boys were mainly abducted by Boko Haram for indoctrination in its ideology and for recruitment into its fighting force, while women and girls were abducted for sexual exploitation, forced marriages, labour and religious conversions to Islam. To date, the whereabouts of many of the victims is unknown, and those who have attempted to escape have been beaten and received death threats.

30.In Nigeria, the abduction of 276 schoolgirls from Chibok, State of Borno, on 14 April 2014, is well- known. Fifty-seven have since managed to escape. OHCHR met several former abductees who escaped from Boko Haram or were rescued. The manner in which they were abducted, the duration of their captivity and the conditions under which they were held were diverse. All nonetheless referred to cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment, sexual violence and other forms of abuses described elsewhere in the present report. Some abductees were held in their own communities, while others were reportedly transported to different locations.